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Benoit, Malenko and Guerrero toured the world before signing with WCW. Their lack of size didn't translate well in the United States, but their respective styles were popular in countries like Mexico, Canada and particularly Japan. The trio would face off repeatedly, forcing them to spend a lot of time together. Their matches were usually considered to be so good that they were frequently booked in the same matches again and again.

They caught the attention of Extreme Championship Wrestling booker Paul Heyman. Heyman was keen to introduce the Mexican lucha libre style to U.S. professional wrestling fans, and he saw Guerrero as an ideal example of this. He also loved the purist, technical styles of Benoit and Malenko. So Heyman booked all three men in his company. It would be here that they met Perry Saturn, a traditional power wrestler and brawler, but he did not become a member of the group until they all signed contracts with WCW.

In 1999, many World Championship Wrestling mid-card to upper-level stars became unhappy with the political environment of WCW. Management offered anyone who was unhappy a chance to be released from their contracts. Scott Levy aka Raven was singled out for his comments on WCW by WCW President Eric Bischoff and offered an opportunity to negotiate his release with the WCW lawyers immediately if he was so unhappy. Levy did. The contract forbid Levy from signing with WWE for the length of terms of his original WCW contract. However, Levy didn't see this as an issue and re-debuted in Philadelphia-based promotion Extreme Championship Wrestling less than a week later in August 1999. His attitude inspired other wrestlers who followed suit.

In early 2000, Chris Benoit, Eddie Guerrero, Perry Saturn and Dean Malenko headed to the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), in a move seen by some as the death knell for WCW, which ceased to exist in a year. At the time of the jump, Benoit, Malenko and Saturn were members of a stable in WCW called The Revolution, whose leader was "The Franchise" Shane Douglas, which further fueled the rumors that Douglas wanted in on the jump.

At the time of their departure to the WWF, Benoit was recognized as the WCW World Heavyweight Champion,[1] the title given to him by then-booker Kevin Sullivan as a way to keep Benoit in WCW. The two never saw eye to eye, however, a primary reason believed to have been Benoit becoming romantically involved in real life with Sullivan's (at the time) wife, Nancy (Nancy and Sullivan were separated, but not yet divorced - Benoit & Nancy later married). WCW management later stated on WCW Monday Nitro that current champion at the time Sid Vicious' foot was under the ropes at the time Benoit forced the submission and therefore his title reign was deemed invalid. However, only WCW does not recognise the title change.

The four first made their appearance on the January 31, 2000 episode of Raw is War, as audience members and backstage guests of Mick Foley. They interfered in a match consisting of Al Snow and Steve Blackman and The New Age Outlaws. While the group was sitting in the front row, Road Dogg took a cheap shot at Benoit, which prompted all four to severely beat both of the Outlaws inside and out of the ring. The attack ended after Guerrero performed a frog splash on Billy Gunn and Benoit performed a diving headbutt on Road Dogg. Jim Ross dubbed them the Radicalz during their 1st appearance. The four were offered a chance to "win" contracts by beating the members of D-Generation X in a series of 3 matches. Dean Malenko lost to X-Pac after an illegal groin attack, while Perry Saturn and Eddie Guerrero ended up losing against the New Age Outlaws, since Road Dogg had pulled the referee out of the ring when Guerrero was covering Billy Gunn after a Frog Splash, thereby illegally breaking up the cover. Chris Benoit then lost to Triple H, but not before making him tap out to the Crippler Crossface while the Referee was unconscious. Soon afterwards, the four wrestlers were "given" contracts with the WWF by Triple H, in exchange for them turning on Mick Foley. The group became known as The Radicalz (sometimes spelled The Radicals in on-screen graphics), and they attained some measure of success. At first tightly knit, all four of the wrestlers in the group eventually drifted apart as all of them sought stardom as singles wrestlers in the WWF.

Saturn and Malenko formed a tag team, with the injured Guerrero serving as a manager for the team. Benoit sought singles success and only worked with the stable when he required back up. Malenko quickly won the WWF Light Heavyweight Championship, annoying Benoit. Varying levels of success caused a rift within the group, and they quietly separated. However, Saturn turned on Guerrero, instigating a feud over the WWF European Championship.

The four drifted apart mainly in the summer of 2000 to pursue individual goals, but in November of that year, the group reformed and aligned themselves with Triple H as his secondaries/hired guns during his feud with Stone Cold Steve Austin. In early 2001, Benoit had turned into a fan favorite during a rivalry with Kurt Angle, while the other Radicalz remained villains and eventually forced Benoit out of the group, with Guerrero replacing him as the leader.

Guerrero turned face, and had a short alliance with Team Xtreme (the Hardy Boyz and Lita), but went to rehab in June 2001 for alcohol abuse. Guerrero completed a three month program and had started working house shows to get ready for his return to television, but was released by the WWF in November 2001 after getting arrested for driving while intoxicated. Saturn, Terri and Malenko continued as the Radicalz until Malenko's retirement shortly before the Invasion storyline.

Guerrero was re-signed by the newly renamed World Wrestling Entertainment in March 2002, and was paired with Benoit to coincide with his return from injury (though not as The Radicalz). The duo would separate after jumping to SmackDown, but interacted on occasion, either as opponents or allies. The most notable instance occurred at WrestleMania XX, where the two celebrated together after successfully reigning as world champions, as Guerrero retained the WWE Championship and Benoit won the World Heavyweight Championship. They would celebrate together for the final time at the first ECW One Night Stand event, after wrestling their final match against each other.

Guerrero died from acute heart failure due to arterioscleroticcardiovascular disease on November 13, 2005, while Benoit committed suicide on June 24, 2007 after murdering his wife and their son beforehand, both Guerrero and Benoit were still employed by WWE at the time of their deaths. Among the surviving members of The Radicalz, only Malenko remains with WWE, having served as a road agent since his retirement from in-ring competition in 2001. Saturn was released by WWE in 2002 and, after a few years where his whereabouts were unknown, remains active on the independent circuit. Runnels left WWE in 2004 after eight years with the company and is no longer involved in the wrestling industry.